I love it.
Rob's Availability. Interests. Experience. Links to resumes in various formats, for various roles. Professional colleagues by name. Professional affiliations. Blogrolls. Just throwing it all out there for the search engines.
This is a simple, free use of a blogging tool. It adheres to the four principles set by the Software Product Marketing eGroup for this project:
- "I Own Me": SPM Members to retain as complete control over their own professional information as possible, and to allow for flexiblility in the display and inclusion of content
- "Zero-Budget": Bootstrap infrastructure using publicly available, free / cheap / open source tools and services as well as establishing desirable alliances and partnerships
- "Absence of Presence": Establish standard mechanisms for evaluating accuracy and strength of SPM members' information
- "Social Networks Work": Drive ResumeBloggers to develop key skills in social networking, virtual collaboration, and social software application / use
Now if Rob only blogged about what he knows, thinks, experiences. It would not only be worth finding, it would be worth reading.
[a klog apart]
Call me on Skype. Chances are:
- You're more likely to reach me.
- The sound quality will be better than my phone.
- Free, if you don't pay for your Internet connection.
<a href="call://evanwolf">Skype me</a> produces: Skype me.
[a klog apart]
Follow this sequence:
- Yahoo! ports their enterprise MyYahoo! onto the Oracle 9i platform.
- They announce that Oracle will make it available to all of their existing customers.
- Moreover launches a weblog search tool for portal users.
- Moreover makes this blog search available to Oracle customers through MyYahoo!
What might we learn from this?
- Distribution channels and customer relationships matter
- 16,000 big companies is a lot of customer access.
- If they average between 1000 and 5000 employees per customer, that's 16-80 million potential weblog readers
- What percent of those become bloggers themselves?
- Mediated blog content is becoming a feature
- Keep up to speed with those bloggers who seem to know everything
- Integration with existing information delivery systems, like portlets, is among formal purchasing criteria.
- The blogosphere may become an alternative to premium content services.
- By and large, no need to pay a blogger for public information.
- Does moreover check the copyrights and licenses for each blog? Does redistribution qualify as a commercial use?
- There is room to compete on quality:
- Technorati and DayPop might do a better job than moreover at finding the right blogs and posts to read
- At Seybold, I asked ten content management system vendors for their blog strategy. Nine didn't know what a weblog was, including the biggies like Documentum. The tenth was a German firm that was all over it. Expect new entrants, especially as they leverage their existing customers.